Salt Pirates&Ancient Olive Trees - Traveling The History Of Ancient Spain [Season 1, Episode 19] - a podcast by Sheila Dee & Evo Terra - Third World Survivors

from 2015-05-17T18:00

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Full Show Script

  • [Die in the desert]

  • EVO: The Mediterranean sea is pretty salty, about 15% higher in salinity than the Atlantic. That's mostly due to evaporation -- the Mediterranean is very shallow and is connected to the Atlantic by only a tiny, 13 km wide channel between Spain and Africa.

  • SHE: On the Spanish coast midway between Barcelona and Valencia, the Ebro river has been depositing silt and sand for countless years, creating a huge delta jutting out into the Mediterranean. Not unlike the Mississippi delta in Louisiana.

  • 3 EVO: This area is called Terres de l'Ebre, literally the land created by the Rio Ebro. On the coast, it's mostly a collection of farms all dedicated to rice production, consisting of 35 square kilometers of perfectly flat -- and kinda boring -- rice patties. But centuries before, the big cash crop was salt.

  • SHE: Tucked between rice fields with little in the way of signage is the old Tancada saltworks. An interpretive center was built to preserve and educate visitors about the history of the site. Here's our guide explaining what we're seeing and how these salt pans were used in the middle ages:

  • [Salt pans]

  •  EVO: But the coolest part of the story isn't about historic salt cultivation. It's about historic salt protection.

  • [Pirates]

  • EVO: Did you hear that? Pirates! But not just any pirates. Salt stealing pirates! Salt stealing pirates from Africa! Oh, I'm totally binge-watching that series as soon as the first season drops on Netflix.

  • SHE: Just a few kilometers upstream, the rice fields give way to rows and rows of olive trees, an icon of Mediterranean commerce and culture. In Arión, one particular stand of trees -- called a finca -- has been tended to for a very long time.

  • EVO: This particular finca is setup as a sort of natural museum and also isn't terribly easy to find. Our Spanish-speaking guide -- he was a huge fan of my Forbidden Planet t-shirt -- walked us through the Millennial olive grove. Or was that millennium? 

  • [Millennial millennium]

  • EVO: You say tomato, I say tomato.

  • SHE: The male voice you heard translating was David from the Terres de l'Ebre tourism board. He had the un-enviable job of wrangling a dozen info-hungry travel bloggers, but he did an admirable job.

  • EVO: Let's not bury the lede here. Millennial, or millennium, whichever... It means a thousand. As in, years. In this next clip, Bret Love from Green Global Travel expressed the shock of realization I'm sure most of us felt.

  • [How old is old?]

  • EVO: Since you probably don't carry a three point five meter tape in your backpack, you can perform this simple test. Stand up and try to wrap your arms around an olive tree. If you can't, and need at...

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